Thursday, November 21, 2013

Sunday Globe Special: Fingering RFK For Castro Assassination Plots

Think of it as self-defense:

"Kennedys keep vise-grip on RFK papers; Access limited because files were deemed personal. But many are official records, a window on history shut now for decades" by Bryan Bender |  Globe Staff, August 05, 2012

WASHINGTON — A trove of documents housed in a secure vault at the John F. Kennedy Library has long been described as Robert F. Kennedy’s private papers and been kept from public view by the Kennedy family. But many of the documents have little to do with personal matters and instead detail once-secret military and intelligence activities he helped manage as attorney general, according to an unpublished index of the collection obtained by The Boston Globe.

I'll bet I'll read about Operation Mongoose in here somewhere.

Scholars and government officials believe the 62 boxes of files covering Kennedy’s three years as attorney general during his brother’s administration could provide insights into critical Cold War decisions on issues ranging from the Cuban missile crisis to Vietnam.

Yet the Kennedy family, led by Robert’s widow, Ethel, has rarely permitted even limited access to the papers. Their expansive control of the RFK archive, which extends to dozens of Pentagon, State Department, and CIA documents, stems from a controversial agreement reached with the National Archives following Robert Kennedy’s assassination in 1968.

Numerous government archivists and historians maintain the family should never have been granted oversight of the official documents — only the files containing private information, such as correspondence with Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis and a collection of materials involving famous family acquaintances like Frank Sinatra.

“It was inappropriate [for the National Archives] to allow it,” said William J. Leonard, who recently retired as chief overseer of the government classification system. “Classified information by definition is information that is under the government’s control.”

Put another way, “Ethel has been given control of documents that she couldn’t even legally read because she didn’t have a security clearance,” said a former National Archives official who had the authority to handle top secret information regarding the RFK papers.

The Globe first reported in January 2011 that most scholars have been unable to get access to the documents. But the index reveals for the first time an overview of the contents of the collection and the fact that most of the documents are not personal papers.

Representatives of the Kennedy family declined requests to discuss the issue in detail. Matthew Maxwell Taylor Kennedy, who has handled the issue on behalf of his mother, said in an e-mail that the family was deferring questions to Joseph E. Hakim, a business executive who formerly oversaw some of the family’s financial holdings.

“I know he is working hard with the National Archives to figure out a way to release all of the papers,” Max Kennedy said.

Hakim did not respond to several telephone messages and e-mails.

According to a person who has been closely consulted by the family on the issue, the government’s mishandling of the papers began when Kennedy’s office was packed up in the summer of 1968 and the contents sent to the National Archives for storage.

“RFK had access to classified documents and who knows what he had in his offices when he died,” said the person, who spoke to the Globe on the condition of anonymity, for fear of upsetting the family.

Several years later the National Archives and RFK’s heirs reached what Thomas J. Putnam, the director of the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum in Columbia Point, described as a “deposit” agreement.

In the legal memorandum, he said, the family agreed to keep the papers in the JFK Library but was given the right to review any access to them. The family also agreed that it would sign a deed granting the National Archives full control of most, if not all, of the documents. But there was no deadline set for the deed, and despite the library’s efforts, negotiations to secure one have started and stalled repeatedly over the decades.

“The family should never have had ownership of the classified documents to begin with,” said the family confidant. The deal with the National Archives to house the papers, crafted in the emotional aftermath of the assassination, “had errors that led to the family feeling ownership. . . . The family holds dear the professional papers of both husband and father.”

The Kennedy family has said it granted access to the papers to a few historians, but library officials maintain no one has seen them all — out of concern for the family’s privacy or because so many files were stamped secret.

Even the author hand-picked by Ethel Kennedy to write a comprehensive biography of her husband — former Kennedy White House aide Arthur M. Schlesinger — was granted limited access, according to private correspondence recently reviewed by the Globe.

“I told her that there would be no direct quotes from the papers without her permission,” Burke Marshall, who ran the Civil Rights Division at RFK’s Justice Department, wrote to Schlesinger on Mrs. Kennedy’s behalf in February 1969.

In his private notes, Schlesinger himself expressed frustration in 1985 that the files were not fully released.

Papers from other chapters of Robert Kennedy’s public life — including when he served as his brother’s campaign manager; his efforts in the Justice Department to combat organized crime; and his three years as US senator from New York — have been released by the library with the family’s consent.

The withheld files are broken into two categories, according to the nearly 40-page index, whose authenticity the Globe verified with a former library official who worked directly with the collection. About half make up the attorney general’s so-called “classified” file and the rest are labeled the attorney general’s “confidential” file.

Both series of files document Kennedy’s broad portfolio as the president’s most trusted adviser, including in foreign policy. That was a distinct departure from previous attorneys general, who were responsible almost solely for domestic law enforcement.

For example, the confidential files included the “top secret” minutes from the Cuba Study Group in 1961, when the US government was trying to assassinate Fidel Castro — an effort in which Robert Kennedy was deeply enmeshed. Also of particular interest to historians, as the 50th anniversary of the Cuban missile crisis approaches this fall, are his top secret “notes and memos” from the Executive Committee he chaired for the president during the 1962 crisis.

Other files labeled top secret are titled Operation MONGOOSE — the secret CIA plan to kill Castro — including RFK’s notes from a meeting about the operation held in the midst of the missile crisis.

Which the Kennedys shut down after the Cuban Missile Crisis -- and thus the CIA and mob collaboration in the Kennedy hit.

Many, if not all, of those documents can now be declassified and released to the public, historians and government archivists maintain. Putnam agreed and said most of the documents have recently been declassified. The next step is to consult the family and gain approval for their release, he said.

According to officials and family advisers, RFK’s heirs have dragged their feet in granting permission in part because the government records are interspersed with items deeply personal in nature.

While not classified, many of those files are labeled as requiring “careful screening,” according to the index, written by a National Archives official in 1975.

They include RFK’s letters to and from his wife; sister-in-law Kennedy Onassis; his father, Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy; as well as his sisters and eleven children. Two other files cover his brother, former Massachusetts Senator Edward M. Kennedy, while a “thick folder” contains communications between RFK and JFK — though it is unclear whether those cover official or personal topics, or both.

Also seeThe Boston Globe's Kennedy Conspiracy Theories 

They killed Marilyn Monroe.

However, contained in other boxes in the series are top secret files labeled “intelligence collection through audio surveillance” and “An assessment of the United States Intelligence Resources in Latin America.’’

Further underscoring the complicated task of separating government documents from personal files are a series of boxes that appeared to contain a combination of the two.

For example, several sequential boxes labeled “personnel reports” contained a sensitive file on Sinatra and another, labeled top secret, about journalist Joseph Alsop. Mixed in with a file of “sensational” news clippings about Marilyn Monroe were “secret” items from FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover and the CIA.

Meanwhile, filed away with a secret folder on Robert Komer, who ran the Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development Support program in South Vietnam — the effort to win the “hearts and minds” of villagers during the Vietnam War — were “two thick folders” from Kennedy White House press secretary Pierre Salinger “on the Blauvelt ‘genealogy’ matter,” referring to unsubstantiated claims that President Kennedy was married to another woman before Jacqueline.

He was but it was annulled. 

“The question of ownership is very real,” said John Seigenthaler, a former RFK aide and friend of the family. “It gets a bit dicey if it’s government property.”

At least one person who has a file labeled for careful screening in the collection said the custody issue should be resolved and all public documents released. “It’s been nearly 50 years. I can’t think of a single reason why they can’t be made public,” said Mortimer M. Caplin, who served as head of the IRS in the Kennedy administration and was one of RFK’s law professors.

Then let's see all the Oswald-CIA files sealed until 2037.

Library officials have expressed frustration that the process has taken so many years.

In a 2007 memorandum to the Kennedy family obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, Putnam said that “one of my top priorities as director is to get the deeds for our undeeded collections.”

But another sticking point, according to e-mails obtained by the Globe, has been the family’s desire to have all of RFK’s papers appraised for their monetary value so that when they deed them to the National Archives they can receive a tax deduction.

Those greedy Kennedys!

John Reznikoff, an appraiser who runs University Archives in Westport, Conn., was consulted by the Kennedy family several years ago on how to properly assess the collection’s worth. But Reznikoff, who previously appraised some of Richard Nixon’s private papers, said that, to his knowledge, the Kennedy appraisal effort has stalled.

SeeNew Nixon tapes reveal calls of friends

“I think it’s a gray area,” he said of the question of ownership of RFK’s unreleased files. “The best settlement would entail allowing the government to copy the archives and have the papers donated for a tax benefit for the family. That seems like the most logical disposition.”

In an internal e-mail in 2007 about organizing an appraisal of the archive, Putnam expressed confidence that 2007 might be “the magic year” for the RFK papers to be shaken loose.

But asked last week about status of securing a deed from the family, Putnam would only say “the negotiations are continuing.”

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Related:

JFK Library releases Hemingway scrapbooks
Cuban Missile Crisis explored at JFK Library
RFK papers add detail on role in Cuban crisis
A pilot’s sacrifice helped defuse Cuban Missile Crisis

Well, let me enlighten you to what is a real hero:

"Vasili Arkhipov was made second in command on the b-59, one of four attack submarines that was ordered to travel to cuba on october 1st, 1962. The sub contained 22 torpedoes, one of which was nuclear, holding the same strength as the bomb that was dropped on hiroshima. The captains of each of the four subs were given permission to fire their nuclear torpedoes at their own discretion, so long as they had the backing of the political officer on board. Unknown to the crew of the b-59, the united states began their naval blockade of cuba on october 24th and informed the soviets that they would be dropping practice depth charges (think warning shots) to force subs to surface and be identified. Moscow could not communicate this information to the b-59 due to it being too deep underwater to receive radio transmissions. On october 27th, 1962, us destroyers and the aircraft carrier uss randolph located the sub, trapped it, and began dropping depth charges to force it to surface. The sub’s crew, which had been traveling for nearly 4 weeks with very little communication with moscow, was very tired and not aware of circumstances. The sub’s captain, valentin savitsky, believed that nuclear war had already broken out between the soviet union and the us and wanted to fire the nuclear torpedo. Fortunately, particularly given the heightened tensions at the time, in this case, one other person had veto power over firing besides the captain and the political officer, the second in command vasili arkhipov. Vasili, despite being second in command on the b-59, was the leader of the fleet of the four soviet subs sent. Had vasili not been present, nuclear war would have likely happened as both the captain and the political officer wanted to launch the nuclear torpedo. Vasili vehemently disagreed, arguing that since no orders had come from moscow in a long time, such a drastic action was ill-advised and the sub should surface to contact moscow. A heated argument broke out- legend, probably false- says punches were thrown. Eventually, though, vasili won the day."

I break out in tears just thinking about it and can barely see my keyboard. One thanks whatever force in the universe helped him calm that captain down. 

"Archives shed light on Robert Kennedy’s tenure as AG" by Peter Schworm |  Globe Staff, July 25, 2013

Stamped “Top Secret,” the Defense Department memo set forth a bold and risky course — a plan to prevent communist domination of South Vietnam. In stark terms, it warned President John F. Kennedy that quick action was needed. More than half the country, it stated, was already under some degree of communist control....

The April 27, 1961, memo was among some 7,500 pages of records released Wednesday from Robert F. Kennedy’s tenure as US attorney general in the 1960s, long-contested documents that scholars have been anticipating for years.

“It’s invaluable,” said Peter Kornbluh, senior analyst at the National Security Archive at George Washington University, which has pressed for the documents to be made public.

Kornbluh said the trove of documents should shed light on the Cuban Missile Crisis and US involvement in Vietnam, among other topics.

“The mosaic is finally being completed on the Kennedy administration’s foreign policy,” he said. 

Even though all this has been out in the public realm for years.

Researchers have sought the records for years, but the documents remained sealed under a controversial agreement between the National Archives and Ethel Kennedy, Robert Kennedy’s widow, that gave the Kennedy family control over the papers’ fate.

Critics have argued the public deserves to view the archives, which include many top secret government documents, and accused the Kennedy family of resisting their release.

Under growing pressure, the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Dorchester released seven boxes of Robert Kennedy’s papers on Cuba last fall, and on Wednesday made 25 more available.

The library said it would release the remaining 30 boxes “in the near future.”

The documents provide a direct look at the Kennedy administration’s policies, including its relationship with Cuba, the Soviet Union, and Vietnam.

In a 1962 intelligence document, requested by President Kennedy, the State Department assessed the strength of the Viet Cong in South Vietnam. Beyond the insurgency’s regular forces, it had 100,000 supporters and sympathizers. Using guerrilla tactics, it had been inflicting roughly 1,000 casualties a month on Vietnamese forces and civilians.

“The struggle for South Vietnam, in sum, is essentially a battle for control of the villages,” it stated. “It is the people and the villages of South Vietnam that are the Viet Cong’s real source of both supplies and recruits.”

That is why it was so critical to deny the Viet Cong access to villages, the document warned.

“Two or more Viet Cong will be recruited for every one that is killed,” according to the document.

Now that happens when we kill 'terrorists."

A 1964 CIA memo focused on Cuba, assessing the staying power of Fidel Castro’s regime.

“The appeal of Castro’s revolution is wearing thinner, but Castro himself retains firm control over the instruments of power,” it stated. “We believe that there will be further erosion of popular support for his regime over the next year or two. Unless he dies or is otherwise removed from the scene, however, we think the chances of an overthrow of the regime or a major uprising against it during this period will remain slim.”

Castro had developed a remarkable ability, it noted, to preserve a “workable degree of unity” among disparate groups. Cuba had taken on the character of a police state, it concluded, using huge numbers of informants to infiltrate counterrevolutionary groups.

Cuba had its own COINTELPRO?

“These informants appear to be active in almost every block of every Cuban city,” it stated. “In addition to spying and reporting on their neighbors, they distribute food rationing cards, hand out propaganda, and organize ‘voluntary work’ groups.”

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Who knows, had the Kennedys survived maybe there would be no terrorism

UPDATE: RFK’s papers: Finally open to the public

I know where I won't be looking to see what is in them.